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Why Can’t I Breathe? David Thomas, MD Internal Medicine University Hospitals Disclosures None Flow of the talk What is COPD? Why is COPD important? Risk Factors Diagnosis and Assessment COPD Screening Management and Pharmacology Asthma tie-in COPD Definition COPD, a common preventable and treatable disease, is characterized by persistent airflow limitation that is usually progressive and associated with an enhanced chronic inflammatory response in the airways and the lung to noxious particles or gases. Exacerbations and comorbidities contribute to the overall severity in individual patients. Small Airways Disease Parenchymal Destruction • Airway inflammation • Airway fibrosis, luminal plugs • Increased airway resistance • Loss of alveolar attachments • Decrease of elastic recoil AIRFLOW LIMITATION Impact of COPD Only heart disease, cancer, and cerebrovascular disease have a higher mortality rate Upward of 25 million possible undiagnosed cases COPD was ranked 12th for burden of disease in 1990 By 2020, COPD is projected to rank 5th Hurd S. Impact of COPD Chest. 2000;117:1S-4S Risk Factors for COPD Genes Exposure to particles Tobacco smoke Occupational dusts Indoor air pollution from heating and cooking with biomass in poorly ventilated dwellings Outdoor air pollution Lung growth and development Gender Age Respiratory infections Socioeconomic status Asthma/Bronchial hyperreactivity Chronic Bronchitis COPD FEV1 No Nosmoker smoker Stop 45 years Disability Stop 65 years Current smoker Dead YEARS COPD—Other Causes Burning of biomass fuels Industrial pollution Mining—coal, silica, etc. Car exhaust pollution Diagnosis of COPD A clinical diagnosis of COPD should be considered in any patient who has dyspnea, chronic cough or sputum production, and/or a history of exposure to risk factors for the disease. Spirometry is required to make the diagnosis; the presence of a post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC < 0.70 confirms the presence of persistent airflow limitation and thus of COPD. Diagnosis: Spirometry Spirometry should be performed after the administration of a short-acting inhaled bronchodilator to minimize variability. A post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC < 0.70 confirms the presence of airflow limitation. Where possible, values should be compared to age-related normal values to avoid over diagnosis in the elderly. Diagnosis: Spirometry Normal 5 Volume, liters 4 3 FEV1 = 1.8L 2 FVC = 3.2L FEV1/FVC = 0.56 1 1 2 3 4 Time, seconds 5 6 Obstructive COPD: Classification of Severity—Gold Stages In patients with FEV1/FVC < 0.70: GOLD 1: Mild FEV1 > 80% predicted GOLD 2: Moderate 50% < FEV1 < 80% predicted GOLD 3: Severe 30% < FEV1 < 50% predicted GOLD 4: Very Severe FEV1 < 30% predicted *Based on Post-Bronchodilator FEV1 Why does early diagnosis matter? Preserve lung function Preserve quality of life for the patient Encourages smoking cessation Enable earlier interventions to prevent exacerbations Reduce costs Decrease mortality Is early detection of COPD a waste of resources?1,2 Decline in lung function is faster in GOLD stages I to II than III or IV Patients with symptomatic GOLD stage I are more likely to progress There is no evidence that late smoking cessation reduces decline in lung function There is some evidence that isolated abnormal spirometry influences smoking cessation Late diagnosis leads to no access to pulmonary rehabilitation or drugs which can improve symptoms and reduce exacerbations 1. Enright P, White P. Detecting mild COPD: don’t waste resources. Prim Care Respir J 2011;20(1):6-8 2. Jones R. Earlier detection of COPD. Prim Care Respir J 2011;20(2):222-222. Should we screen ALL smokers for COPD? Who to screen for COPD? With active screening you find a lot of smokers with previously unrecognised COPD 27% of smokers aged 4055 had COPD 85% of those had mild COPD Mild COPD Moderate COPD Severe COPD Stratelis G et al. Br J Gen Pract 2004; 54:201-6 The Dangers of Screening Spirometry in early COPD (GOLD 1) may be normal and a disincentive to smoking cessation Smoking cessation is the only thing that influences disease outcome Could it be COPD? Question 1 Do you smoke? Or have you been a smoker? Question 2 Are you older than 35 years? Question 3 Do you cough several times most days? Question 4 Do you bring up phlegm or mucus most days? Question 5 Do you get out of breath more easily than others your age? Case 40 year old patient comes to PCP’s office complaining of chronic morning cough. 10 pack year smoking history. Should this patient be screened for COPD with spirometry? Who Should be Screened Smokers >10 pack-year Age > 35 AND Symptoms: Cough Sputum Shortness of breath Wheezing SPIROMETRY Can early intervention and screening really help? All major guidelines recommend early diagnosis of symptomatic disease – the most recent being the UK NICE guidelines 3 state: “Spirometry should be performed in patients who are over 35, current or exsmokers, and have a chronic cough. Spirometry should be considered in patients with chronic bronchitis. A significant proportion of these will go on to develop airflow limitation.” The health care worker must suspect the possible diagnosis from symptoms and risk factors (not only smoking), consider screening with questionnaires or mini-spirometers, and offer proper spirometry to confirm the diagnosis. 1. National Clinical Guideline, C. (2010). Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Management of adults with COPD If you test one smoker with cough every day You will diagnose one patient With COPD a week Patients Underestimate Disease Severity Data from the Impact of COPD in Europe and North America in 2000 Study1 (n=3265) showed: Of those too breathless to leave the house, 36% described their condition as mild or moderate 60% of those who were short of breath after walking for a few minutes on the flat described their condition as mild or moderate 1. Rennard S et al. Eur Respir J 2002;20:799–805. COPD Assessment Test (CAT): http:// catestonline. org COPD Assessment: Co-morbidities COPD patients are at increased risk for: Cardiovascular diseases Osteoporosis Respiratory infections Anxiety and Depression Diabetes Lung cancer These comorbid conditions may influence mortality and hospitalizations and should be looked for routinely, and treated appropriately. Comorbidity and Mortality in COPD Related Hospitalizations 40 Mortaliyty (%) COPD Non-COPD 30 20 10 0 RF Pneum HF IHD Hypert Holguin et al. CHEST 2005; 128:2005 TM Diabetes PVD Percentage of subject group COPD: Systemic Effect – Osteoporosis 100% 80% 13 20 41 32 60% 49 40% 20% 48 55 31 11 0% Healthy subjects n=38 No bone loss FEV1>50% pred n=35 Osteopenia FEV1<50% pred n=46 Osteoporosis Bolton CE, AJRCCM 2004 Management of Stable Disease Smoking cessation has the greatest capacity to influence the natural history of COPD. Health care providers should encourage all patients who smoke to quit. Pharmacotherapy and nicotine replacement reliably increase long-term smoking abstinence rates. All COPD patients benefit from regular physical activity and should repeatedly be encouraged to remain active. Smoking Cessation!!!! Smoking Cessation is the only effective intervention to slow progress and to improve outcome in COPD! Therapeutic Options Appropriate pharmacologic therapy can reduce COPD symptoms, reduce the frequency and severity of exacerbations, and improve health status and exercise tolerance. None of the existing medications for COPD has been shown conclusively to modify the long-term decline in lung function. Influenza and pneumococcal vaccination should be offered depending on local guidelines. Therapeutic Options: Pharmacology Beta2-agonists Short-acting beta2-agonists Long-acting beta2-agonists Anticholinergics Short-acting anticholinergics Long-acting anticholinergics Combination short-acting beta2-agonists + anticholinergic in one inhaler Methylxanthines Inhaled corticosteroids Combination long-acting beta2-agonists + corticosteroids in one inhaler Systemic corticosteroids Phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors Therapeutic Options: Bronchodilators e.g., SABA (albuterol), LABA (salmeterol), SAMA (ipratropium), LAMA (tiotropium) Long-acting inhaled bronchodilators are convenient and more effective for symptom relief than short-acting bronchodilators. Long-acting inhaled bronchodilators reduce exacerbations and related hospitalizations and improve symptoms and health status. Combining bronchodilators of different pharmacological classes may improve efficacy and decrease the risk of side effects compared to increasing the dose of a single bronchodilator. Therapeutic Options: PDE-4 inhibitor Long-term treatment with inhaled corticosteroids added to long-acting bronchodilators is recommended for patients with high risk of exacerbations. In patients with severe and very severe COPD (GOLD 3 and 4) and a history of exacerbations and chronic bronchitis, the phospodiesterase-4 inhibitor (PDE-4), roflumilast (Daliresp), reduces exacerbations Goals of Therapy for Stable COPD Relieve symptoms Improve exercise tolerance Reduce Symptoms Improve health status Prevent disease progression Prevent and treat exacerbations Reduce mortality Reduce Risk Manage Stable COPD -Pharmacology SAMA = Short Acting Muscarinic Antagonist (ipratropium) LAMA = Long Acting Muscarinic Antagonist (tiotropium) SABA = Short Acting Beta Agonist (albuterol) LABA = Long Acting Beta Agonist (formeterol/salmeterol) ICS = Inhaled Corticosteroid (mometasone) PDE4-inh = Phosphodiesterase 4 Inhibitor (roflumilast) Manage Stable COPD -Pharmacologic Patient First choice Second choice Alternative Choices A SAMA prn or SABA prn LAMA or LABA or SABA and SAMA Theophylline B LAMA or LABA LAMA and LABA SABA and/or SAMA Theophylline LAMA and LABA PDE4-inh. SABA and/or SAMA Theophylline ICS and LAMA or ICS + LABA and LAMA or ICS+LABA and PDE4-inh. or LAMA and LABA or LAMA and PDE4-inh. Carbocysteine SABA and/or SAMA Theophylline SAMA = Short Acting Muscarinic Antagonist LAMA = Long Acting Muscarinic Antagonist SABA = Short Acting Beta Agonist LABA = Long Acting Beta Agonist ICS = Inhaled Corticosteroid C PDE4-inh = Phosphodiesterase 4 Inhibitor D ICS + LABA or LAMA ICS + LABA or LAMA Combo Agents: LAMA/LABA for COPD only Anoro (umeclidinium/vilanterol) Stiolto (tiotropium/olodaterol) What is a COPD Exacerbation? “A sustained worsening of the patient's condition, from the stable state and beyond normal day-to-day variations, that is acute in onset and necessitates a change in regular medication in a patient with underlying COPD” What Causes COPD Exacerbations? Infections, air pollution, seasonal allergies The cause of one-third of severe exacerbations cannot be identified Etiology of COPD exacerbations2 ≈ 80% Systemic symptoms: fever, chills, tachycardia, vasodilation, and/or malaise Purulent sputum Bacterial ≈ 40% − 50% ≈ 20% Mucoid sputum Infectious Atypical ≈ 5% − 10% Bacterial-viral co-infection (25%) Noninfectious Viral ≈ 40% − 50% Allergies Weather extremes Smoking Pollution Stress Undertreatment or nonadherence COPD Exacerbations Exacerbations become more frequent and more severe as the severity increases In the ECLIPSE study (2,138 patients) the single best predictor of exacerbations was a history of exacerbations 2/3 of COPD exacerbations are not reported by patients! Worse Prognosis with Frequent Exacerbations ≥3 acute exacerbations requiring hospitalization are associated with a risk of death 4.30 times greater than for those patients not requiring hospitalization (1) 1. Soler-Cataluña et al. Thorax 2005; 60:925-931. How are COPD Exacerbations Managed? Prevention Treatment Action Plans Prevention of COPD Exacerbations Smoking cessation Access to patients Influenza vaccination Pneumococcal vaccination Annually Every 5–10 years Pulmonary rehabilitation Self-management education Optimize maintenance bronchodilator therapy Combination therapy Roflumilast1 Mucolytics Moderate to severe COPD with >1 exacerbation/yr Chronic productive cough Patient use of custom action plan Increase in dose/frequency of inhaled bronchodilators Systemic corticosteroids Antibiotics (if change in sputum) Increasing severity Management of COPD Exacerbations Prevent and treat respiratory failure Oxygen (low concentrations to prevent hypercapnia) Consider BIPAP Follow-up visit 48-72 hours Consideration and management of comorbidities Consider appropriate exacerbation prevention strategies COPD Conclusions COPD is a slowly progressing disease which is often unrecognised until it is clinically apparent and moderately advanced. What to look for: Fatigue, dyspnea, “smokers cough”, chronic cough, sputum production, wheezing People do not see the doctor for this!! We need a Spirometer to confirm the diagnosis and assess severity The public health message is that chronic cough and sputum are not normal their presence should trigger a search for underlying cause(s). Early intervention will help to preserve lung function which in turn will reduce the risk of COPD exacerbations Earlier diagnosis would enable healthcare workers to encourage smoking cessation Asthma Overlap with COPD Avoid triggers Routine provider appointments…like diabetes or hypertension DON’T SMOKE!!!!! How does asthma differ from COPD? Peak Expiratory Flow Rate (PEFR) home/office monitoring Peak flow meters Nomenclature Short-acting beta agonists (SABA) albuterol, levalbuterol, pirbuterol, bitolterol First line therapy- most effective medication for relief of acute bronchospasm Produces rapid bronchodilation within minutes Can be given MDI, nebulizer Using one or more canisters per month suggests inadequate asthma control There’s 200 puffs in a canister Regularly scheduled use is not recommended May increase airway hyper responsiveness LABA: Long acting beta-2 agonists: salmeterol, formoterol, arformoterol Not appropriate for monotherapy!!! BLACK BOX WARNING LABAs are used in combination with ICSs for long term control and prevention of symptoms in moderate or severe persistent asthma--Step 3 or greater Not a substitute for anti-inflammatory therapy Have slow onset of action--Not for acute symptoms or exacerbations *** Anticholinergics: ipratropium, tiotropium Inhibits airway constriction by blocking acetylcholine (versus beta-agonists that block beta receptors) Decrease mucous secretion Decrease lung over inflation Slow acting; not for rescue Better with COPD and older people because of decreased beta 2 receptors with aging Good data that it may potentiate beta agonists in moderate-severe exacerbation Anti-inflammatory agents Inhaled steroids: Low potency: beclomethasone (Beclovent, Qvar), (Azmacort) High potency: flunisolide (Aerobid), fluticasone budesonide (Pulmacort) triamcinoline (Flovent), and Oral steroids: prednisone (Deltasone), prednisolone (Prelone), methylprednisone (Medrol) Mast cell stabilizers: cromolyn (Intal), nedocromil (Tilade) Leukotriene modifiers: montelukast (Singulair), zafirlukast (Accolate), zileuton (Zyflo) Methotrexate, cyclosporin, plaquenil, dapsone use in resistant cases Asthma Nomenclature Asthma Cheat Sheet Intermittent Mild Persistent Mod Persistent Severe Persistent Day Symptoms <2/week >2/week Daily >Daily Albuterol Use <2/week >2/week Daily >Daily Step Up…Step Down New Asthma News Tiotropium (Spiriva) now as asthma indication…but dose is different! (125mcg) Omalizumab severe persistent asthma…but needs allergy component and testing …and SubQ OMALIZUMAB HAS BEEN SHOWN TO DECREASE THE INCIDENCE OF ASTHMA EXACERBATIONS IN ADULTS AND ADOLESCENTS (12 YRS OF AGE AND ABOVE) WHO HAVE A POSITIVE SKIN TEST OR IN VITRO REACTIVITY TO A PERENNIAL AEROALLERGEN AND WHOSE SYMPTOMS ARE INADEQUATELY CONTROLLED WITH INHALED CORTICOSTEROIDS Asthma Combo Agents: ICS/LABA Advair and Flovent (fluticasone/salmeterol) Dulera (mometasone/formoterol) Symbicort (budesonide/formoterol Questions? The Dangers of COPD Screening Smith-Sivertsen T, Rortveit G.Scand J Prim Health Care. 2004 Dec;22(4):196-201. Department of Public Health and Primary Health Care, University of Bergen Should general practitioners screen smokers for COPD? The COPD diagnosis can usually be made by means of spirometry before symptoms appear. General practitioners are these days encouraged, from several quarters, to screen their smoking patients for early COPD. Smoking cessation is still the only available treatment that indisputably improves the long-term prognosis of this disease. CONCLUSIONS: A large randomized study is needed, in which the independent effect of spirometry as part of a smoking cessation programme is studied. Until such a study has shown convincing results, and has been followed by a cost-benefit analysis in favour of screening, screening for pre-clinical COPD in general practice should not be recommended. However, it is important to diagnose people who may benefit from symptom-relieving treatment, and therefore patients with smoking-related symptoms should be offered spirometry. Finally, the general practitioner should strive to offer smoking cessation counseling to all smokers, regardless of their lung function.